Long Beach officials are taking a hard look at every park, school, and public space named for César Chávez after a wave of new allegations against the late labor icon. City leaders say they will catalog where his name appears and ask residents how the farmworker movement should be honored in the future. The move lands as cities and states across the country reconsider holidays and monuments tied to Chávez.
City Council review kicks off this week
The Long Beach City Council is expected to formally kick off the review on March 24, 2026, identifying all public assets that carry Chávez’s name and outlining a plan for community outreach, according to the Long Beach Post. In a statement to the outlet, Mayor Rex Richardson said the review will look at “how we recognize the farmworker movement in our public spaces, holidays, and civic life.”
Council staff have not yet shared a detailed timeline or said whether any specific renaming proposals will return to the full council for a vote.
Probe that set off the reckoning.
The city’s action follows a multi‑year investigation published on March 18, 2026, that, as reported by The New York Times, details allegations that Chávez groomed and sexually abused women and underage girls while leading the United Farm Workers. The fallout has been swift: unions, elected officials, and municipalities nationwide have canceled celebrations and reconsidered public honors, according to The Associated Press.
Local landmarks under the microscope
Long Beach already has several sites that bear Chávez’s name. A west‑side park was officially named for him by the City Council in the late 1990s, according to the Los Angeles Times. Cesar E. Chavez Elementary School opened in 2004, per the school’s website at Cesar Chavez Elementary.
City officials say compiling a full inventory of these sites is the necessary first step before any renaming debate can even start…